Leah is the embodiment of her motherís compassion and her fatherís determination. She is also
exceptionally intelligent and very capable of making up her own mind. In the beginning of the story, she
exerts a lot of energy in trying to say the things her father wants to hear and in trying to believe in what he is
doing. However, she sees contradictions very early-for example in the inhumanity of telling Tata Boanda he
would have to get rid of one of his wives. Leah is the most capable of giving and receiving love, but
struggles with some guilt over her sister. Later in the story, she feels ironically guilty for being white.

Leahís primary fault is that she can be impetuous and sometimes speaks or acts without thinking. She is
ready to stand up for what she believes, but doesnít always stop to think about the source of her opinion. A
good example is the hunt. Is her motivation solely to acquire food for her family, or is she also mindful of an
opportunity to show that she can do something no one else in her family-or even the village can do. Given
the cultural traditions, it is logical to assume that her family would have received some of the meat from a
successful hunt, perhaps even more than the meager quarter of antelope they ended up with. Furthermore, the
division over her insistence on participating created a major conflict within the community; she did not ask
whether or not her independence was really worth the consequences.

Leah is also intensely loyal. She tries to defend her father even though she sees the humor and irony in some
of his methods. When she can no longer believe in what he is doing. She looks to Anatole. Her relationship
with him may be initially gratitude and friendship, but that grows into love. She never complains about
hardships of life in the Congo and never finds fault with Anatoleís beliefs or activities. She is a loyal and
devoted partner who develops her own life, but also never forgets her twin sister and mother. She returns to
the States for a visit when possible and gives her boys opportunity to get acquainted with their grandmother.

Adah Price

Adah grows up with a series of misconceptions that she realizes later. She is insightful, extremely intelligent,
and creative, but she believes the world sees her as defective and therefore of less value than her siblings.
Her impressions are at least partially created via the attitudes and treatment at the hands of adults. As a child
she was placed in a class for mentally retarded because of her crippled side and apparent inability to talk. She
felt the frustration exhibited by parents of other children who had to acknowledge that the crippled child
could out-perform their own children. She also experienced rejection at the hands of her Sunday school
teacher when she questioned the wisdom of a God who would condemn people because of their skin color or
place of birth.

Although Adah can talk if she wants to, she communicates primarily by writing
her comments and questions. This forces her companions to communicate
on her terms. And, since she has already decided that she wants no part
of her fatherís religion, she is more open minded toward concepts and
cultures of the Africans. Her own disability gives her an appreciation
for hardships that other people overcome.

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Ruth May

Ruth May is the baby of the family. Her exact age is unclear, but Orleanna implies that she is six or more
years younger than the twins, and the other girls refer to her as "our baby sister." She is old enough to be able
to read fairy tales, but young enough for babyishly literal interpretations of her fatherís words and is small
enough for her mother to carry her when the ants attack. A reasonable guess seems to be that she might be
about 8. In any case, she is a precocious youngster, observant, friendly, and sympathetic. She is a static
character and functions primarily as the mechanism for holding the women of the family together and driving
them apart upon her death. She is the innocent recipient of everyoneís love, the catalyst that reaches the
hearts of even the African chief when she is hurt. Although she is a flat character herself, she is has
significant importance in the activities and focus of Orleanna and her sisters.

Anatole

Anatoleís primary importance is in his function as a mediator for the Price family and in his role in Leahís
life. When she realizes that her father has emotionally abandoned the family, Leah turns to Anatole.
Although he is not cold or calloused like her father, Anatole at first refuses her love, forcing her to find some
way other than words to accept her. We never hear from Anatole himself, but his presence and understanding
of his people creates a foil for the continuously bungling Nathan. He is a quiet force for good that everyone
in the family accepts except Rachel whose primary hang-up is his color.

The Congo

It seems impossible to do other than view the Congo as a vast, silent character in the novel. Her voice comes
through in the cycles of the jungle, in the traditions of the people which are closely allied with the demands
of the land itself, in the variety of plants and animals, and in the triumphs and hardships of a people whose
simplicity has often been mistaken for ignorance. Adah and Leah both observed that in Africa, it seemed as if
the Congo owned the people. The natives exhibit a unique, if un-discussed, respect for the land; it is no less
than the land demands and those who spurn such respect pay a hefty price.

The Congo is like an organism itself; itís a gigantic parasite that gets a grip on the intruders and does not let
go even if they manage to leave. She beckons and teases with her vast mineral wealth, punishes with her
intense climate conditions and poisonous plant and animal life, and fights for her own identity through a
unique and beautiful people who are her very soul. The Kilanga word "muntu" for all-spirit seems the most
accurate expression after all.